(x - 6)(x - 3)
9x+3
If you mean: 2x^2 +9x +7 then it is (2x+7)(x+1) when factored
2x2+9x+9 = (2x+3)(x+3) when factored
(x^2 + 9x +14) / (x+5) Factor (x^2 + 9x +14) [(x+7)(x+2)]/[(x+5)], x cannot equal -5
10 + 9x
(x - 6)(x - 3)
No. It is 9x, which is a monomial.
9x+3
If you mean: 2x^2 +9x +7 then it is (2x+7)(x+1) when factored
2x2+9x+9 = (2x+3)(x+3) when factored
(x^2 + 9x +14) / (x+5) Factor (x^2 + 9x +14) [(x+7)(x+2)]/[(x+5)], x cannot equal -5
102 +9x +4 = 9x + 106, which is in its simplest form.
If a trinomial is a perfect square, then the discriminant will equal 0. The discriminant is equal to B^2-4AC. The variables come from the standard form of a quadratic which is Ax^2+Bx+C In this problem, A=81, B=-72, and C=16 so the discriminant is: (-72)^2-4(81)(16)=5,184-5,184=0 so this is a perfect square trinomial. To factor, notice that 81=9^2 and 16=4^2, so 81x^2=(9x)^2. We can then factor the trinomial into (9x+4)(9x-4)
9x + 2 = 12x + 14 -3x = 12 x = -4
When factoring it is fairly easy to check your answer. Say we want to factor x2+9x+14=0 (x+7)(x+2)=0 now if we want to check then we can just multiply these together and we should get the original polynomial... x2+2x+7x+14=0 x2+9x+14=0
9x2+11x-14 = (9x-7)(x+2) when factored with the help of the quadratic equation formula.